
♐ Sagittarius Daily Horoscope for July 5, 2025
With the Moon in Capricorn, your adventurous fire is being grounded just enough to help you get focused on the bigger picture. It's not just about dreaming today—it's about mapping it out. Time to mix your wanderlust with a solid plan.
💼 Career & Ambitions:
You've got big ideas, but the magic is in the execution. Today is perfect for laying the foundation for a long-term goal—especially something involving education, publishing, or travel. Be bold but strategic. Dream it, then blueprint it.
💖 Love & Relationships:
You want deep conversations over surface-level flirting today. If you're single, you might find yourself drawn to someone with ambition and brains. Already paired up? Discuss future plans together—it could bring a surprising spark.
💪 Body & Wellness:
Your energy's a slow burn today. Think hiking, stretching, or anything steady and rhythmic. Your body will thank you for choosing something that builds strength instead of burning you out.
🧠 Mental Health Check:
You're feeling unusually practical for a Sagittarius—and that's a gift. Use it to cut through any mental clutter and set goals that actually align with your bigger vision. Clarity is your mental reset.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Khaleej Times
4 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Instagram rolls out new location sharing, reels features; security concerns raised
Instagram has launched three new major features — Repost, Instagram Map, and the Friends tab — for its users. The Repost feature will help users share others' content with your own followers and friends. The feature will give credit to the original poster. Stay up to date with the latest news. Follow KT on WhatsApp Channels. Instagram Map The 'Instagram Map' feature is reminiscent of a similar feature on Snapchat. With this option, one can share their last active location with a chosen group of friends. The user can see their locations and content they've posted from interesting places. Also, the feature is designed with safety as a priority — parents of supervised teen accounts will be notified if their child turns on location sharing. "Share locations with friends and see what's happening around you on the Instagram map. And if you're a parent with supervision set up for your teen, you have control over whether they can share their location, and who they're sharing with," said Instagram. When the app rolled out the Map feature, it caused a wave of confusion among users who were worried that their locations would be visible to all their followers. Some users have since been shocked to discover that their location was being shared, viral posts have shown. "Mine was turned on and my home address was showing for all of my followers to see," Instagram user Lindsey Bell wrote in reply to a warning posted by "Bachelor" reality television personality Kelley Flanagan to her 300,000 TikTok followers. "Turned it off immediately once I knew but had me feeling absolutely sick about it." In a TikTok video, Flanagan called Instagram's new location sharing feature "dangerous" and gave step-by-step instructions on how to make sure it is turned off. Instagram chief Adam Mosseri fired off a post on Meta-owned Threads stressing that Instagram location sharing is off by default, meaning users need to opt in for it to be active. "Quick Friend Map clarification, your location will only be shared if you decide to share it, and if you do, it can only be shared with a limited group of people you choose," Mosseri wrote. "To start, location sharing is completely off." The feature was added as a way for friends to better connect with one another, sharing posts from "cool spots," Instagram said in a blog post. Users can be selective regarding who they share locations with, and can turn it off whenever they wish, according to Instagram. Friends tab The Friends tab within Reels helps users see what their friends have liked, commented on, or recommended via Blends. Instagram shared these updates through an official blog post, accompanied by a reel from platform chief Adam Mosseri, where he opened up about the new features in detail. All three features are available in the UAE as of this week. According to Meta, the new features are meant to make the app more community focused, and help people connect with their friends.


Khaleej Times
6 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Bob Odenkirk talks 'Nobody 2', family themes, and training like an action star
Bob Odenkirk may have stumbled into action-hero territory by surprise in Nobody (2021), but the Emmy-winning actor has since proven he's more than up for the bruises. In Nobody 2, Odenkirk's Hutch Mansell tries to hit pause on the chaos with a family vacation — only for trouble to find him on day one. Directed by Timo Tjahjanto, the sequel raises the stakes with bigger fights, darker villains, and even a duck boat brawl that leans into Jackie Chan–style comedy. But as Odenkirk says, what makes Nobody resonate isn't just the bone-crunching action — it's the family story at its heart. In this candid conversation, he talks about expanding Connie Nielsen's role as Becca, welcoming new cast members like Sharon Stone, John Ortiz, and Colin Hanks, and why he never really stopped training for Hutch. He also reflects on how his own life — including past break-ins and family struggles — shaped the DNA of the franchise. Here are edited excerpts from the conversation: We know this is a great action movie, but there's a lot of family themes in there as well. Why was that important for you to make sure that we saw that side of Hutch's story too? Well, I thought a lot about why people liked Nobody (Part 1); the action was great, Ilya Naishuller shot it and Greg Rementer oversaw the choreography. That was awesome. But I think that what really connected with people was that they related to the tensions of being a dad, a family man, and having a long-term relationship, which can be difficult. So it was super important to me to reconnect with that family and make them feel real, make them feel like they love each other, but they struggle with the way life wears you down. For me, it's in the DNA of Nobody, and if you don't get that right, it doesn't matter how good the action is. Speaking about your family, Connie is back as your wife and she takes on more of a supportive role in this feature. Can you talk about how her role has expanded? Yes, she has a more active role. She takes on some action. At the end of Nobody (Part 1), I said to her, "Would you be willing to do action in Nobody 2 if we get to do that?" And she was down for it big time. She trained for action in different films she's done, not to mention Gladiator, which is a great film. And she said, I'm ready to go anytime you want me to do that. To me, one of the themes of Nobody was the husband and wife who've lost touch with each other, the feelings of respect for each other, and how the other person is an active free agent who's made a choice to be in this relationship. I wanted in Nobody 2 for the wife to remind Hutch that she, too, is a person of power, choice, and ability. And she does that at the end of the film. You've got some really amazing new cast members joining. Can you talk about those people? John Ortiz is amazing. He's one of our great actors, and he's in this film and wonderful as Wyatt Martin. Colin Hanks, I love Colin. I did Fargo with Colin and we knew we had a bad guy sheriff, but I needed him to be a guy you didn't suspect when you first meet him. And he's just a joy to watch, playing a very, very bad person. Then we have Sharon Stone, who is our "big bad," and we needed a big personality and a big presence to play that part. Sharon ate it up. Let's talk about Timo (director), his style and what that's lending to the film. Well, Timo Tjahjanto is a fantastic director. He's made numerous films like The Night Comes For Us. One of them you can watch on streaming pretty easily. He does horror films and action films that are visually involving, surprising, and impressive. And I wanted this film to blow up bigger than Nobody, so I wanted those big visuals and those big sequences. And he was the man. The thing that I'm most excited about is while it's true that Timo is an expert and brings the darkness, the bloodiness that he loves, that action film fans love, he also was up for the fun and the comedy of say the duck boat fight, which is more like a Jackie Chan film fight and isn't really in line with what Timo has done in the past. So he opened up his vision to include ours, bringing his vision to another level with Nobody 2. Let's talk about your dedication to this role and your training. We've heard that you never stopped training after Nobody. Can you talk about that? Yes. Nobody is a film that is almost a personal film to me. My family had two break-ins. And when I talked to Derek Kolstad about the movie, I talked about those break-ins and how much feeling I had left inside me of frustration and resentment that I wanted to act out on screen. In Nobody 2, we go to Plummerville. In my mind, it's the Dells. But when I was a kid, I went on two vacations, one to the Illinois State Fair and one to the Wisconsin Dells. Sadly, the Wisconsin Dells is too damn nice and impressive for what we were looking for in Nobody 2. But it is reflective of a family vacation, where very often it's a little less relaxing than you wish it was.


Khaleej Times
9 hours ago
- Khaleej Times
Why Quentin Tarantino won't direct 'Once Upon a Time in Hollywood' sequel
Quentin Tarantino has revealed why he decided not to direct the upcoming sequel to his Oscar-winning film Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. The filmmaker, who has long spoken about retiring after directing his tenth feature, admitted that returning to familiar ground left him 'unenthused.' Released in 2019, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood starred Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, and Margot Robbie in a 1969 Los Angeles setting and went on to gross over USD 392 million worldwide. While Tarantino has penned the script for the sequel, he confirmed he will not take the director's chair this time. 'I love this script, but I'm still walking down the same ground I've already walked. It just kind of unenthused me,' Tarantino said on The Church of Tarantino podcast. 'This last movie, I've got to not know what I'm doing again. I've got to be in uncharted territory.' Tarantino praised David Fincher, who will direct the sequel, calling him one of the best filmmakers working today. 'I think me and David Fincher are the two best directors. So the idea that David Fincher actually wants to adapt my work, to me, shows a level of seriousness towards my work that I think needs to be taken into account,' he said. The sequel will see Brad Pitt reprise his role as stuntman Cliff Booth. Though Tarantino won't be directing, he assured fans he would remain involved with the project when needed. The director also addressed questions about his scrapped project The Movie Critic, which he once described as a 'spiritual sequel' to Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. While the film would not have featured any crossover characters, including Cliff Booth, Tarantino revealed that the challenge behind the project was making an unlikely subject matter compelling. 'There was a challenge that I gave to myself when I did it — can I take the most boring profession in the world and make it an interesting movie? Who wants to see a TV show about a movie critic? Who wants to see a movie called The Movie Critic? That was the test,' he explained.